Publication | Open Access
Internalization of the Kv1.4 Potassium Channel Is Suppressed by Clustering Interactions with PSD-95
102
Citations
46
References
2000
Year
Kv1.4 InternalizationMolecular BiologyPeripheral NerveCellular PhysiologyKv1.4 Potassium ChannelHyperpolarization (Biology)Inactivation KineticsIntercellular CommunicationBiophysicsCell PhysiologyMolecular PhysiologyIon ChannelsCell BiologyPotassium HomeostasisChannelopathiesSignal TransductionInternalization RateNatural SciencesPhysiologyElectrophysiologyMolecular NeurobiologyCellular BiochemistryMedicine
The contribution of voltage-dependent ion channels to nerve function depends upon their cell-surface distributions. Nevertheless, the mechanisms underlying channel localization are poorly understood. Two phenomena appear particularly important: the clustering of channels by membrane-associated guanylate kinases (MAGUKs), such as PSD-95, and the regional stabilization of cell-surface proteins by differential suppression of endocytosis. Could these phenomena be related? To test this possibility we examined the effect of PSD-95 on the internalization rate of Kv1.4 K(+) channels in transfected HEK293 cells using cell-surface biotinylation assays. When expressed alone Kv1.4 was internalized with a half-life of 87 min, but, in the presence of PSD-95, Kv1.4 internalization was completely suppressed. Immunochemistry and electrophysiology showed PSD-95 had little effect on total or cell-surface levels of Kv1.4 or on current amplitude, activation, or inactivation kinetics. Clustering was necessary and sufficient to suppress Kv1.4 internalization since C35S-PSD-95, a mutant reported to bind but not cluster Kv1.4, (confirmed by imaging cells co-expressing a functional, GFP-variant-tagged Kv1.4) restored and, surprisingly, enhanced the rate of Kv1.4 internalization (t((1)/(2)) = 16 min). These data argue PSD-95-mediated clustering suppresses Kv1.4 internalization and suggest a fundamentally new role for PSD-95, and perhaps other MAGUKs, orchestrating the stabilization of channels at the cell-surface.
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